Wednesday, November 26, 2014

Terry Buethe is a Lutheran pastor, counselor, teacher, writer and good friend. He wrote this book to offer encouragement to those who suffer from depression and for those who feel sad or discouraged from personal life events. It is an excellent book for personal devotions or for group work. He has graciously given me permission to post one of the readings from the book. Enjoy, be encouraged, know you are loved by your Heavenly Father.

Re-Learning to Receive

“Tis’ better to give than to receive,” is one of those
ageless adages we have all heard. Most would agree it’s not bad advice,
especially when trying to teach our children to be generous, compassionate
people. But as with many other rules about life, it is not an absolute
standard. Circumstances in our lives can send us through cycles of being givers
and then being receivers over and over again.

Unfortunately, some of us have learned to be givers so well,
it’s hard to become a receiver. When we are giving, we are in control of the
situation. We might feel a certain sense of pride or accomplishment that we are
able to help someone else.

But to be placed in a situation where we need someone else
to help us upsets our sensibilities. We feel as though we have lost ground. We
don’t like being dependent on anyone else. We feel vulnerable at the mercy of
another person’s decisions. We might even wonder what receiving from this
person is going to cost us in the long run because we have also learned
“there’s no such thing as a free lunch.” And if we are willing to be honest
with ourselves, our pride also gets in the way. We don’t want to admit to
anyone, not even to ourselves, that we can’t handle everything life throws at
us on our own.

Of course, that’s a ridiculous stance to take. No one is
equipped to handle everything in life. And if we stop to think about it, it
becomes really obvious. We regularly rely on mechanics, doctors, plumbers and
truck drivers to provide us with services or deliver goods that we need. We are
all dependent on each other, no matter how much we want to believe we are not.
But that “I can do this myself” voice is strong and it can prevent us from
letting others know we are in need of something they can provide. It can also
prevent them from intervening when we aren’t even aware we need help.

Our heavenly Father knows all about our prideful independent
streak. He knows we need an example of how it should be done and even to do it
for us. That is one of the reasons He sent His Son in human flesh to experience
the trials and temptations we do, to feel the hunger, the thirst, the pain and
even the fear that we do. We have a Lord and Savior who knows exactly what we
are going through and He showed us how to receive as well as how to give.

Jesus received help from the angels after His forty days in
the wilderness where Satan repeatedly tempted Him. He and His disciples
received meals and lodging from people in many of the places they traveled. He
received from a woman who washed His feet with her tears. He showed us there is
nothing shameful in receiving.There is
nothing demeaning in allowing another person to come alongside us when we are
overwhelmed. In fact, as He was describing the Judgment, He said that when we
receive assistance from another person, it allows that person to minister to
Jesus. (Matt 25:31-46)

God almost always works through people. He rarely performs
big showy miracles. Instead He uses the hands and tongues and feet and ears of
those who follow Him. He comes to you through the people who care about you and
offer to help. And He comes to you through His Word with promises to care for
you in all situations.

Sunday, November 9, 2014

Me: Dorris, I read in the paper that this
corner will be a roundabout.

Dorris: A roundabout? How many houses will be sacrificed for
this endeavor?

Me: None. It will be built in existing space.

Dorris: Built in existing space. Hmm, someone got elected on
that slogan.

It is interesting to me how conversation with Dorris will be
simultaneously sense and nonsense. Because of the work of Alzheimer's, so many neural pathways in her brain are no longer working.Conversations on a familiar topic can easily be
sidetracked to something that seems quite unrelated and yet, gives the suggestion
of at least a thin connection.

Dorris was a longtime member of the planning
commission in her community, which is why I mentioned the proposed roundabout.
She recognized the term and immediately thought of a possible consequence, but
then, how did we venture into campaign slogans?

Perhaps she doubted the truth
of my statement and this was her brain’s way of expressing a lack of trust in
promises.

Then, again, it may just be a random phrase and my brain may
be working overtime to try to make sense out of it. I assume that her comments
must be related to mine, so I search until I find a relationship. If nothing else, at
least my brain is getting a thorough work out.

I am reminded of a Human Cognition class I taught
this summer. A student from Republic of
Côte d'Ivoire asked why farmers in her area believed that specific rituals
brought about rain. We talked about how our brains want to determine “cause and
effect” and when we see a desired effect, it is easiest to believe that our own actions are the cause.

Pastor’s sermon
today pointed to a particular phrase that tends to twist around in the roundabout of cause and effect.

We are
saved for works, not by works

But when the goodness and loving kindness of God our Savior appeared, he saved us, not because of works done by us in righteousness, but according to his own mercy, by the washing of regeneration and renewal of the Holy Spirit, whom he poured out on us richly through Jesus Christ our Savior, so that being justified by his grace we might become heirs according to the hope of eternal life. (Titus 3:4-7, ESV)

We want to be saved by works because it
seems to make sense. If we do good things, then God will let us into heaven. We
want to live our lives in such a way that we can bargain at heaven’s gate:

"Yeah, I know I messed up there, but then I made up for it later."

"I wasn’t good all the time, but I was good
most of the time- or at least, I was good when it counted."

"Sin is no big deal, just look at the
good things I did."

We want that cause and effect to be about
us. But we wrongly put the effect before the cause.

We are
saved for works, not by works

For by grace you have been saved through faith. And this is not your own doing; it is the gift of God, not a result of works, so that no one may boast. for we are his workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand, that we should walk in them. (Ephesians 2: 8-10, ESV)

As much as we would like to be the reason
for our salvation, we are instead the result of our salvation. God created us;
we ruined that creation. Through the death and resurrection of His Son, God
saves us even though it is impossible for us to do good works of our own
accord.

God could have stopped there. Jesus made it
possible for us to enter heaven covered in a white robe, earned for us through
His victory over sin and death. God could have left us in our miserable lives
and simply waited to see us at heaven’s door.

But, He created us for good works, which He
“prepared beforehand, that we should walk in them.”

We are simultaneously blessed by the work
of justification and the work of sanctification.

We are already savedthrough Jesus. Now,
and only now, are we ready to participate in the good works prepared for us.